The Guardian Page 11 Monday Jan. 7. 1957 -TIN MEMORIAM BURKE-in loving memory of my mother, Mrs. Daniel R. Burkef who passed away Jan. 7. 1954. No one knows the heartache, Only those who have lost can tell, Of the grief that vie bare in silence. For the one we loved so well. Always loved and remembered by daughter. Dorothy and son-in- law. Reg and Family. GOOD ACCCOMMODATION FOR girl student near college. Dial 4796. our GIRL '1 STUDENT ACCOM . modated at 81 Prince. Phone om. R00-".MER.s ANDVBOARDERS to commmodated. Women pensions board or room. Dial 7454. STUDENTS AVCCOMMODATE-D. Central. One block from college. 146 Iiiilsboro St. Phone 3564. STUDENTS on OTHER nosnol ”mm""' ers accommodated Central. Reasonable rates. 198 Grafton St. CNR Announces out 3705. Changes Due To CPR Situation MONCTON. - Temporary changes in the Canadian Nation- al Railways Montreal - Edmund- ston sleeping car service as part of an overall revision of passenger schedules to take effect at the same time as the anounced cess- ation of CPR services. have been announced by the CNR. Effective from Montreal on Jan-L uary 2 and from Edmundston Jan- uary :l- the Montreal - Edmund- ston sleeping car service will op- erate to and from Central Sta- tion at Montreal Instead of Windsor Station. The sleeping car will leave Montreal Central Station on train No 60. The ”Scotian". at 3.45 p.m. on Mondays. Wednes- days and Fridays and will arrive 9.00 s.m. on Mondays. Wednes- day and Fridays. During the tem- porary rerouting of this service this sleeping car will operate via Charney Que. and not via Queb- ec City. In other regions. the revision of schedules will effect mainly pool FOR SALE OR TRADE '49 FORD Coach. AEI condition. New win- ter tires. Apply Belvetlcrc Ser- vice Station. Phone 6921. ms oooor: REGI.-INT v'.' er flight. sports-tone Low ton capacity. Plywood box, Good condition. Phone 7239 or Charlottetown. ris Minor, 31275.00; used 1953 Morris Minor 3475.00; guaranteed good value. Signed: S. R. MacKay. PRICED LOW FOR IMMEDIATE SALE trains in the Ottawa - Toronto. Toronto - Montreal and Montraal- Quebed areas. . . CNR - operated pool train No. Robinson Supplies mdlaalyliinp Toronbtio at an a vn at ontres I . ' ' p.m., fziilioperste into Central Llmned Station. Montreal instead of Wind- sor Station effective January 1. In F.r no." the reverse direction. CNR - op- pratnd pool train No. 15. leaving Windsor Station at 3.1!) p.m. will, effective January 2. operate from Central Station instead. It was also pointed out that dur- ing the period when these trains use ftionntreal's Central Station the routing will not permit stops at Westmount and Montreal West. Commencing January 2 there will be no direct train service be- tween Ottawa and Toronto. In the Montreal - Quebec City service all pool passenger trains operating to and from Montreal's Windsor Station will be cancelled. Chandler Bros. Dial 6557. ply 114 Prince Street. or business girls. Dial 4283- sT:i.r cotvrainap 5 740 Guardian. Report On Andrea Doria Sinking WASHINGTON (AP) U.S. roiiresaional investigators said Thursday their study of the sink- Phone 547! after 5.30 p.m. FTJRN-ISRED ROOM. suir Dial 6792. lbssrisrs Amaaoilateill can 3"llmlL'3ali.5.:T9iI33lil: A cage. Also two-whecl trailer, one 7901. SPECIAL SALE-NEW I956 MOR- one good good 1953 Morris Oxford station wagon, S775-00; fair 1951 Pontiac sedan. 2-door. 5375.00; fair 1951 Ford Sedan, 8275.00. Above cars ' I955 BUICK SPECIAL L:......... .:........ FOR RENT -FLOOR SANDERS ...L.?...m....m....-.. I UNFURNIBHED I-l0USEKEEP- iiig rooms, 3rd floor. Dial TWO UNFURNISIIED ROOMS. central location. Dial 3679 or sp- 'iiiiTATs:b.. FURNISHED I tinti- sittlng room. suitable for nurses ROOM heated apartment. constant hot water. outside city wrlla box om: iiTi6'nTiin'A'ri:o' AND FURN ished suitable for business girl or man. Handy both hospitals. Anti: for working girl. heated house. board optional, 61 Bayfleld St. nUiri.s:x'(r:T)irAiNViiic."iii-"r'tri- CL For Fast Selling, Renting, Buying! Use Guardian Want Ads P hone 850 BROWN FUR COAT. HE 14-II lritesox "M" Guardian. 2 uotsrinrfa-iirnas. run! years old. due to freshen. Anal! Ira McCuubreL(jpi 40 i.i-:ono"ii'rTrUI.I.l'rs. SEVEN months old. Apply Joseph HIYEI. Charlottetown R. R. 0. up FOR SALE -ruiiasaiuo GEAR. Three years old. Ephraim Cas- ey. Richmond. BUILDING AT CONWAY 52 BY - 25 with hardwood floor. Suitable for two small houses or ranch home. Priced to sell. Mrl. C0llll Milligan. Conway. GOOD RESOLUTION: USE "Abundant Living"-or one of the many other devotional booklets for daily personal or family worship. An ideal gift. At The Bible House (opposite Eaton's). FOR SALE Used Fireco coal and wood range with water front. Excellent condition. 1 CALL 8934 FOR SALE Used Gas Washers 59.95 up Oil Space Heaters 535.00 up Electric Ranges 549.00 up Electric Washers 529.95 up Electric Refrigerators 549.95 up Coal and Wood Ranges 3229.95 up Television S9995 We take anything on trade. Firestone Home & Auto Co. Ltd. 181 G1. Geo. St. Dial 5547 Fonts llslii lilsntoii .m...m.-.E.-z---A WAITRESS WANTED. APPLY. in person to the " g iiBy7i"siTiAii-: -UTY SALON WANT! two students to learn hairdress- ing. Male llslp Vfaitteii WANTED SINGLE. MAN. FOR farm work. Apply Box 749 M Guardian. IF WE SEND YOU YOUR OWN suit without one cent cost to you. will you wear and show it to your friends and take their easy orders. making a handsome pro- fit from each one. You can sell to entire family. Clothllll. lilo!!- shirts. slacks. sportswear etc. You need no experlnce. 1 show ing of the Andrea Doris shows in- , p rrnstionsl shipbuilding standards "L d""'"" lM"3'm"m' ti” you how and supply big cats- are not high enough for safety. l30d'00m5 "id "in- """9d- 09' iogue mtg, Dept, The Coop- Tbey said also that information Ill! 143 5Pl'l"3 P”k,R”d' or ' E Co.. P.O. Box 1100. In the disaster raises "serious questions" as to whether the An- drea Doria and the Swedish ship Stockholm "were being operated in accordance with the precepts of good seamanshlp and the pro- visions of the international conven- The Andres Doria, as Its luxury liner. sank off the Atlantic For Sale of baled hay. R.B. Malpeque. rirrtsii:'Eo7('rs. ritics:oTv's'iiTi reasonable. Also large quantity Simpson. REGISTERED scorcii coi.i.ii:s Registered German Shepherds. Champion sired. Budgies- An- Bcauhsrnols. Que. NEWSPAPER POSITION OPEN coast after it and the Itockholm man Kennel. Tatsmsgoucha. collided July as. H p Nova Scotls. Applicant should have R h ck" mm um grade 12 education. Ex- that the operation of the stand- srds of the 101! international con- R ventlon do not meet their object- ives." specialists who made the investigation for the House of Rep- resentatives merchant marine committee reported. "it is recommended that the United states propose interna- tional study and agreements look- ing to more effective standards for construction and operation." The report disclaimed any inten- tion of fixing responsibility for the tragedy that cost some 50 lives. but it said: ”lf the ships had been following the inommended sealanes . . . the collision would not have hap- pened for the ltockholm was nearly on the westbound track and some I miles north of the recom- mended track for vessels east- bound lo Europa." However the report noted that use of the uslanes is not man- datory even on countries such as Italy and Sweden which signed. me 1948 safety of lift at sea Gol- entlon. to sell. PARKER JEWELL. York--Phone 7074 FOR SALE lng. Reasonably priced. I Montague. Apply- GEORGE MscDONALD Three registered Aberdeen An- gus bulls. 9. I0 and 19 months old. Two of the above animals are Ontario bred. The dam of the other was Grand Champion of Charlottetown Exhibition for five years. All above animals priced Modern equipped machine shop. Furnished dwelling and two acres of land. Busi- ness operating nnd expand- perlence is desirable but not necessary. Medical and hos- pital employee benefits. Ap- plications, stating qualifica- tions, should be in writlnl and address to- P. 0. BOX 520 Summerside. YOUR IMPERIAL rzsso srovE ISLAND GRILL. QUEEN STREET ws: REPAIR AND iii-zwiivu M0- irr----sen-i;-. Neads Trained Iiien -- Pays Topp writes: "Since the week betore. 8130 per week. The last two weeks I am convinced that your training. we can train you and help you RUN A DEPARTMENT STORE Yes: LOOKING INTO run rowan lanes of form a veritable tliermorc. for Great Britai France the seizure invades the na-'Jesus. tional pocketbook: the two own till from your own home. We'll put you into your own bus- oan sell to entire family, cloth-l llli. Shoes. shirts. slacks. sports-: Wellf. work cloths. jewellery etc. Amazing money making plan. No experience necessary. full or part time. Free clothing for personal use as extra bonus. Write for powcrful sample out- fit and full instructions absolute- ly Free. Dept. Cooper-Johnson. Que. Sdfll-IITITSEROT-El7& Oil Agent. Charlottetown area is Barry C. Mellish. Phone 8398. serving full course dinners; specializing in Chinese dishes. Dial 5228 tors. washer repairs. wringerl rolls. refrigeration service and- repnirs. Storey El:-t-tric. DIESEL - HEAVY EQUIPMENT Wages p Diesel man. Ed Hariihcrgorl July 4th. I have averaged over I made 8152 and 5158 respectively. programme played a great partl in my advancement." If you are mechanically lfl('llflEd.l get started in this field which offers opportunity and a future. Write at once for complete de- tails about the possibilities for you in the Diesel and tlcnvyg Equipment Field without obliga- tion to: TRACTOR TRAINING SERVICE. LTD., PLACEMENT ADVISORY SERVICE. Box 743. Guardian. Teachers Wanted TEACHER WANTED FOR GAS- pereaux School. Supplement for half year 3300.00. Apply Percy King. Secretary. Vlanteil WANTED - ALE BOTTLES pints or quarts. Dial 8595. YOUNG CHILDREN T0 BOARD in comfortable home. Apply Box 752 M Guardian. l RED AND WHITE - PINE LOGS also one and two inch pine. R.L. Coles. Milton. WANTED GOOD USED INSULAT-E ed truck box. Reply stating con-1 dltion and best price. Eastern Packing Co.. Ltd. WANTED - COMPETENT GIRL for secretarial work in Char- lottetown area. Typing and. shorthand essential. Apply giv- ing details of education and ex- perience together with referen- cos to box 745 Guardian. Vfsntsil In Item isnsrno. ruifiiisnno seam"- 4883. specs for long term occ PHON iness absolutely Free! Now you an stock of what they have done in the ed with boys and girls to look ahead and s for Co: R0. Box H00, Beauhammsifghe year; to come we will have teachers to safeguard the educa-' tion of our children. or are we indifferent to the fact that, unless something is done to remedy the situation very soon. many children fl they are now. in the bands of un- qualified teachers? bring about a solution to our ex- trcme teacher shortage. We have- not Ie drcn to get a sound basic educa-l lion Wlll('h is their rmht as citi-l tens of Canada: to create conditions that will en- sure the recruitment and reten- tion of a body of professional teachers competent to develop to the full our human resources? about this problem. I should like to lay on the conscience of every. adult on our Island the serious- hr-ss of the educational plcture.l This situation will not correct it-i self. What is going to happen in. years that lie ahead will dependl Are we satisfied that our schools meat. 9 or 4 rooms. Adults. Dlalldollars. In time of war, the sea WANTED IMMEDIATELY 3.000 square feet ground floor warehouse PROFESSIONAL CARDS At this season of the year when business firms are taking the education of our ee how well we are planning the future. Have IAE the assurance that in sufficient supply of well-trainedll d in their most im- n our lslan ' years. will be. as p i.i We should do something now to enough properly qualified .-icliers today to enable our chil- are we helping We must not be compla l upon the way we take hold of the. problem now. A crisis has beenf reached. - I believe that the prosperity of any country is dependent upon the- educatlonal level of its people. are doing a good job of preparing' all our boys and girls how best to develop and use our material resources? Are our schools doing a good job of educationlng our boys and girls to stay on the farms and become leaders in the conimunlty to which they belong? it will be through the medium of our schools that the pattern for ” tic policy will be worked out that will ensure a healthy. happy. and full life for the people of our Island. How can the schools do this very important work when the supply of adequately trained teachers is so low? The reasons for the shortage of teachers are many but not so many nnr so complex but that they could be solved if an aroused public would demand that an in- vestgiaiion into our educational problems be made. Shall we sit on the sidelines or shall we decide that the edu- cation oi our children is of pri- mary lmportancs and must not be neglected? SUEZ CANAL What makes this I00-mile-long ditch through the faraway des- ert so important? First it connects the Mediter-p rnnean and Red Sens. eliminating the long trade route around the African capes. Using the canal. London - to - Bombay vessels clip 5.100 miles from the movement of goods. Without the Canal. United States oil investors feel the pinch. for huge Middle East oil depos- ils represent millions of American upancy. E 8032 THE BEST STEP YOU CAN TAKE to start you on a worthwhile career is to join the Canadian Army for 3 great years. Here are some of the mivsntssu this step will bring you: ' A chance to learn new and useful skll'.s 11 c A knowledge of how to lead men 0 good pgy and promotion 0 Opportunities for travel and adventure 0 A healthy outdoor life ' Organized Ill?" HCFIII A Finest medical and dental care ' 8 days paid holidly I 73 ' A fine pension will Ann your three years service. u may return to civilian IIO . EARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. I00. Matheson 8. Foster IIO Richmond St: .-...m..?- J. Elmer Ilonehurd. ILA. Q Q. & Phone 0232 M. A. Former. Q.C.. LL!- last of Commerce Bldg. Allison M. Gillis. LLB. OPTOMETRISTS J. A. Carrulhars, ID. ID leaf N. Dill IIII Byron J. Grant. O.D. I” If K Dill "II J. S. Taylor, R.O. Caner Rent 1 Queen Sta. Office I183: House 4786 H. J. Mabo -. IO. 1. L MocO-algae ant blsi use than It Otu. I. McOuoid. I.A. Tsbeellgthltnalaatbslih 0yenrseld.aIIn laIestArIsy standards. 10 witsiastraialsgsosne hlHn ,7'carG':&&T "M." in the servlceofyenr senatry. ”.g",.. g 1753",, HOIQI. Dlll E!-I ll. IlaaLli0D. LLB. aoni. aims soii.niNo D Ilsa-as L Dial no ..'.n. In A W h 6 d . ill :'TT':TT'T-""'-T as... :l'..'" 1.". 'c'....... .. CHIROPRACTOR '3l'"" '4 H”l”'" Dr. W. I. Carson 1 I NIVI Ilcotla Rldl. .' E.” .t' D.” u” M" ' """"""" ARCHITECT I'll Grafton Street 0. Keith Pleltard I. Assn. ss.l.A.l.c.. Inmarslls. P.l.l. Dial an &Istfetewn. Tnsadsys ma Ii-this. Dial III MUSICIANS H. JOHN HARRIS. r. a c o. sun. .. as Richmond st. DIAL Sill Please send Inc. without obliga- tion. full information on Army carsnrsu ...usssnssisuuu-sun-us sun the ,1” o ' F DIAL ssti .'.:.Y"" ”"' ' """"" '"' CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS Am! I:i;;r'Igl.t3IuWun- Mi-MDNALD. cunts a co. 0' &0P'ER BROTHERS c"""”';,f'3:"' "L origin Ildg. ansotuisws '' co" not us: litlsnmusugn an-ca eeooasvusoaes-anus. i H. R. DOANI I COMPANY ARTHUR J. OARIITT Palmer Electric Iutlding l.().tsIatewn P.o.IoaIO .sweat. long in Iury, French Consular Olin-er Fer- dinand tie Lesscps won the boy- ish friendship of Mohamiiicii Said. arch. by smuicgliiig him plates of macaroni to relieve a iiizid diet. Later. as Vireo) of Egypt, Mo-l Frenchman's plan of linking the two seas. ”to open the earth for I of desert and marsh from 1859 to log the load. Working under the desert ginecr saw his dream graduallyl twain of East and West. Till: can- al might serve two or three hun-1 tired of ships a year, be reflected. and promote peace by drawing na- tions closer together. their work to completion. celebrations brizhtened the event, And vessels sent by various nations for al. Among them. rode the yacht Eugenie of de Lessons homeland. s l Suez. iopen. in time of war as in time life-line. Fur-. l - A "Big omit". the middle of the lillh LAPII-l ieir-apparent of the Ottoman inon t iammed Said listened to the 1tll55. wlir-ii machinery be-can shar- sun the itonsiil-turned-en-ll materialize - an almost arruiv- l straight. line of water uniting the l l clanked Gay In 1869 the machines in Novcmbcr the flags of till, triumphant pl'nf'0sslflt1 In the can- L'Aigle. bearing the 1-Jnipressl The Suez Convention of 18880 pelled in French the watt-i'wa,v's ownership. - the Compagnie Uni- verselle du Canal lllaritimede iialways to be free and of peace. to every vessel of com-. merce or of war. without distinc-1 lion of flag." In the normal course of the original agreements. Egypt would take control in lilfifi. In 1955. a bystander might have. counted 14.666 ships passingl through the canal, and for the: first time in its history more than 100 million metric tons of cargo. - five times the traffic of- n decade ago. Along the canal. so, blended in the desert that shipsl seem riding waves of sand. move astounding quantities of cotton. textiles, grain. coal. crude oil. and other offerings of East and West. Suez seldom sleeps. Pilotsp workmen. and administrators nor- mally take shifts. Vessels move in both directions around the clock passing in the wide spots of lakes or in a recently completed "Switch". Ships carrying Royal mall or dangerous cargoes take priority in transit. For years business has been bursting at the banks. Increased sizes of ships brought demands for a waterway larger than the original one of 72 ft. width and 26 ft. depth. Now, squealing dredges have widened the canal to nearly 200 ft, taking ships up to 35 it. draft. Last year the net profit was 330.5 million. A laden l6,6fl0- ton T-2 Tanker tlols one way on the canal for a toll of 38.000. Beyond the realities of econom-; ics lies the pleasure tbousandr have shared in watching the con-l istant Sucr. parade of vessels. - the varied flags of passenger liners. gypsying tramps. homeless and the l'llsl-splolclled frclghters. the and st-ari-ori by distant docks. Am- ong the procession. lateen-sailed craft of the East loaf by. their crevtmcn hopeful of winds but ready to leap ashore and seize lines during calms. HlSifIl'l('llll)'. tensions have in menlod the Isthmus of Suez like its son They were felt when an ant-ii-iu lizyptlnn. Persian. and Assyrian armies prowlcd its old caratan roads. are as old as when .Insclilt was sold into l-1gyp- tian lioiidarze. and the lsraelitn 1 l OTTHI-I 4Cl"t--The South is "cnmiiii; in town." Sn can A A. Caron. Canada": i-oniinissioner at New (tr- 1 t"aiir loans, in it review of Canadian muip potentials in the "Deep SoiiIli' oi the United States. Tip. 'tltlIIllIK to town"- the ex- oriu: nf snutlicrners from farms In lion and big industrial areas- has ilEl1llli'3YifT for Canadian ea- pnru he says. it may spell bigger and lwticr markets for Canadian rnu nialcrinls essential for indus-- trial pinduction. ; --i-no generations." said Mr: (min, in an article appearing in the trade department's foreign YOUR BES (2000 Lb. Toni lnote n CAR BATTERIES ........ beer bottles. scrap metal. Truck scale weighing to St reet. Open 8 A T C Ii” C& 1 Q3 """""""'-""'ssT T. 'mos'”””saovF"""7 S T 1 T C 1 CC - A assesas no i Gibraltar and the canallciidurcrl 40 years of wandering. n andll-Jgypt with Mary and the infanil and macaroni fathered thepAcross 22 centuries the ancient In Egypt-watercourse was either traded upon. left to disiiitcgruii-fat or purposefully destroyed to thwarti invaders. The present Sweet Wat ents er Canal follows ditch dug in Tutanlthaint-n's reign Pfl. fresh water from the Nile to Suez loutis. a necessity since sea brine. zine. Better fnuls the four lakes the canal trs- had a Canadian edition. verses. earth seemed less likely to suc- lcecd than icy Columbia's frontier wild. (ow OIICI - 0 : Bnlh l.o FOR IRON and STEEL SCRAP Paying highest cash prices for hides. Osntrslly located opposite Eato .M. - 5 PM. Monday through Friday- Saturday 8 AM. - 1 P.M. MAURICE BLOCKCO. LTD. l ndeed. another Joseph fled into: 4 l)e Lesst-ps came late with al- Dast and are planning to do in the I . future, it might not be . bgd mg; per cent of the dispossessed canal dream of a canal. Pharautrsi for those 0; us who in concern. wmpany. p ' lslaves dug. into the Isthmus tolfeder An idealtsts dream. human 10111 the Nile and the Red Sea..gone rebuilt.' an irrigation in pour water into Biblical Gosh- T-shtsped. It now channels all peoples." The sweat-damp sltouldvrs of le- KITIMAT gion-like laborers scooped the soil Not long ago. icw places i Kitamat in Britishl B u t l ook now. Kitimat's hotels rival the best. Taxis scurry about in thei figures. glow of neon signs. Churches raisei lain th their steeples. and children jamlvertisin schoolls. Iilureh than 9.000 inhabit-.Sl,000.000. ants ook to t e day when Kitimatl . . . . will reach its planned populationl READERS NOT AFFECTED of 50.000. becoming British Col- umbia's third largest city. Canadians have sbovelled up: mountains. shifted river courses. and thrown the map all about then place and started Kitimat toward becoming the largest aluminum smelter in the world. Seldom have engineers planned so big. For one thing. the Nechako River flows east when it should flow west ta serve the project. So workmen tore a granite mountain apart in teeming truckloads and dumped it to build the world's largest slop- ing. rock-filled clay-core dam. Bottled up. Ncchako reversed its flow. creating a reservoir 125 miles long. The enormous lake presses againt the Coast Moun- tains. its surface half a mile high. -Thus. a powerful water pressure was built for a sea-level power station at Kemano, only ten miles away on an arm of the Pacific. The ten miles. however. lle through solid granite. Powerful machinery clawed a funnel through it. enabling the water to plummet 2.600 it. through genera- tors produclng more kilowatts than any others now on earth. Building the world's mightiest underground power station. min- ers cut a quarter mile inside Mount DuBose. Ribbed with con- crete, the station is sizable enough to embrace a cathedral. With the monstrous task com- pleted, I(emano's power had to reach Kitimat. 50 miles away where 4hs enormous smelter would transform a powdery extract of bauxite on into aluminum need- ed ln everything from airplanes to kitchen pans. workmen accustomed to height soon had power lines strung ov- er snowy mounlains to Kitimat. Helicopters hovered above work men. dropping them material. Four hundred pound steel bolts were lowered to platforms pre- cariously perched on mountain- sicles. Sunk into rocks. the bolts secured cables supporting trans- mission lines Workmen often reached the tower sights by hell- copier. Aluminum workers have a jar- gon of their own. They call fur- naces ”pots". More than a hun- dred pots make a people imasi that someday there will be lit pollines housed in 34 smelter structures. Then from hsciire Kltimat. transports will take some 550.000 tons of al- .-. uminum a 5'98!”- iiepnrtnient is conducted by the Prince Edward Island 'I'eachers' Federation. Contrihii- firms are W('lt'fll1'IE and should he sent in Esirllv Bowiiess. Gencral Sr-t-rotary. 98 Prince St.. Charlotte town. This lpu ""' ""' ""'""' WIDENING EDUCATIONAL HORlZONSlF0I'el9n Magazine Tax Has Limited Application OTTAWA ICPt-Canada's new. tax on Canadian editions of for-l eign magazines-announced in the. al budget last March - has into effect with the New Year. Apparently only Time and Reader's Digest will pay the tax present. Four other publications - Par- Magazine. Family Circle. Woman's Day and Canadian Farm Chemicals which had Canadian editions when the tax was announc d. have discontinued them. Another American maga- Living. which also l ceased publication. Religious medical magazines are exem Time and Reader'n'Digest have from Oniraised their advertising rates tol cover the tax. On the basis of 1955 figures it is estimated they will pay an additional 3000.000 in taxes. On the basis of current and if advertisers main- elr present volume of ad- iz. the tax may exceed Readers are not affected. sub- scription rates have not been raised. Speculation about what adven- isers may do has centred around three courses. They may increase appropriations sufficiently to meet the new rates resulting from the tax; they may decrease their advertising in the blications affected: they may their advertising in Canadian magazines and other their advertising l i decrease l media. out. A spokesman for Maclean v Steel Mills Get Good Start On I957 Production start on a predict proluction year. says. The week' tailed 2,461,893 tons guts and castings. ”Steelmen are of steel for in ll7.036.085 made in 1950. metal-working weekly says. per cent step-up over 1956's 115. 000.000 tons." ate at 90 per ce based on the new offici for I956. plagued by labor troubles. "T that." the trade weekly says. i 'i-ified for on July 1. July I. 1958. with co creases also due. is ulan. 1 was unchanged at 1137.98 a not ton. The composite on steel-l lmaking scrap. however. declined SL113 to 863.17 ti gross fun. A month Iago It was at 866.17- liuula lll;l';2llf1F. "the South has been lurcclx rural. "Thu: hat line in the colonial data of ploillidilflllh and slavery '. Ii was true as recently as 1933 ppm. Fr .1 n if i i n D. Roosevelt .9,-,.,.-,i llm Mltllll 'the nation's No. 1 (tr-iiriflllllti pit-blcm.' "Rut the South is no longer rmple have left their- vilntht and have come in the last decade, city rlinibed from one-I gm.-,1 in nu-,qily one-half the total. mciana and Florida have tIilsK('ll the 50-per-cent l,n-iislana is 540 MT 990'” Florida 650 per PPM. in lnun population has already mark urban. T MARKET . . . . 525.00 . Each 31.75 horsehair. aw pricel s............. r your convenience. n's Store on Kent ,' mmpn Trend Away From Farms In South May Aid Canadians "As country folks mow 10 ill? city. thcir incomes go up. c- tween 1939 and 1954 the annual PM 4 income in it southern lstntes rose from 8381 to 31.305. And the income level in the South. lnlthough still below the average for the United States. has shown a higher-than-average increase 10 recent years." Mr. Caron suggested Canadian tiles which wish to sell in this area should hear these changes in mind. "Generally speaking. they lit!" improved the market for Canadian goods. For example many new muthern industries rely tin Cann- dian raw materials-such as alu- minum for several factories. var- tlrularly in Florida and Texas: gypsum and rock from Nova Sco- lin for plants in Savannah. Jack- sonville and New Orleans. "Other raw materials imported from Canada include zinc. asbes- tns. nickel. copper and lead. One Savannah plant producing titan- lum dioxide obtains its total an- nual requirements of titanium ore -zm.ooo torts-from Sore. Que. "The market in this territory for Canadian newsprint and for hardwoods and softwoods for the construction industry is lncress-i log. particularly In Tens and Horida. The demand for our tim- ber will continue to rise with in- dustrialfatinn and the resulting demand for buildings and l l l he market for Canadian exports. t t. south also a to be an a traction for Canadian capital. "This fastdeveloping part of pt. editions and so are is To date there is no clear indi- cation how the matter will work Hunter Publishing Company. pub- CLEVELAND (AP)-Steel mills last week operated at 100 per cent of the 1956 capacity. getting a good ed 131,000,000-ton Steel Magazine a production to- forscsstlng that 1957 will be a record output year. overtaking the present high of the "A 120,000,000-ton yield would ba a.3 The magazine says that in or- der to reach the new production level the mills would have to oper- nt of capacity. sl annual' capacity figure for 1967 of 133.- 459.l50 net tons. This compares with 128,363,090 tons in 1956. Pro- duetlon last year represented 09.6 per cent of the official capacity Steel says the lnduslryis produc- tinn efforts this year should not be he three - year contract ba- iween industry and union prevents I I "But it does mean increased ll- llM- Klflmli T hnr costs. wage increases are spa- lil57. and at-of-living in- These labor cost increases. along with price jumps in most raw materials will bring liirther price advances on steel." Steel's plica compos s on fin- hed steel for the week ended .1-5... changed at IVs. homes. Besides offering an attractive. liahers of Maclcan's and a num ber of other Canadian magazines. said the most dramatic effect M the tax has been to stop a flood of Canadian editions of foreign mag- azines which seemed to be getting under way before the tax was announced. SEE L'NI-'AIRNI-JSS Supporters of the tax contend Canadian editions of foreign mag- azines constitute a form ol "dumping" and unfair compet- ition wliicii is not allowed in other business field. The Canadian editions. they has itself add. carry nearly the same editor- editorial and assocla costs which Canadian magazines must meet. A spokesman for an advertising agency. speaking against the tax. said one effect is that women shoppers in chain groceries read only Anierictin advertisements in the magazines which some of the chains distribute. The tax-announced as so per cent-works out at 13.9 per cent of the gross amount charged for advertisements. because it does not apply to the portion repre- sented by advertising agencies' commissions or to the estimat ' amount by which rates have been raised because of the tax. JAN. 1 INCREASES Time has raised its advertising rate by 151: per cent and Reader's Digest by 14 per cent-both effec- tive Jan. 1. The tax applies to foreign mag- azines winch sell editions in Can- ada containing advertisements not printed in home editions and in which less than 75 per cent of editorial content differs from that of home editions. It applies to revenue from all advertisements. In cases where a single charge is made for an advertisement ap- pesring in all editions of a maga- zine. it applies to a fraction of the revenue - the proportion of the number of Canadian-edition copies to the magazine's total circula- lion. if a special billing is mads for advertisements in a Canadian edi- tion. or if an advertisement ap- pears only in a Canadian edition. I charges made. PROTECTION Is AIM Finance Minister I-far editions info advertising revenues dian magazines. ativa Opposition who said it was of government interference in the; magazine business. and that it would be ineffective in protecting Canadian magazines from foreign competition. Latest av Reader's Digest a combined clss . culation of 945.123 from its Ear I Iisb- and French - language edi- tions: and Time s 168.907. This compared with 477.- 864 for Mncleanls and 459,423 for Liberty. N. Y. Stock Market Starts Year Upward Nr-jw VORK IAPV-The turn of the year brought the stock market its -third siu-ccsslve weekly rill last wcck it uas the best ad- vance of the last three weeks. The Associated Press nveralt of 60 stocks wisp 5130 to 3182.00. The average has failed to reach that point since Last. Sept. when it penctmled It lllllllll! rlhen fell back It came close to it I l iwn occ.-isiniis since but de- clined sharply afterwards. It was an abnormal neck. (0!!- iaining as it did the hectic New Year's 1'-ire session when tradinl soared in .'i.68fl,l)()0 shares. til! W-nmi biggest iolume of a cau- tious and tnricrisivv 3'9?"- Year-cnri roiisidcrations. mainly 18,105. 5.11.-:. accounted for ptho lritsh of trading on Monday. I'll! l 1.275 zssiics traticd made it by U" the broadest market. of 1956. The market made Ill 1957 debut .w(-dncsriiiy with a disappointing p-and-doun so-stun News of the first malftr "'5 gem-my rise in crude oil prices sent oil shares scampering ahead .on Thursday and the rest of tho n-my-kel rc-spnnflffl lfl EOOCT -Sglyle The rise in tho nil: continued Friday except for those which were clipped by it late spell 0' profit inking which buried steels and a number of other industrials. Aside from those group actions. the rails performed wr-ll. respond- ing to forecasts of heavier car- loadincs in the first quarter. Among Canadian issues on tho New York Stock Exchange. Inter- national Nickel moved up 4'-G to I09 and Mclntyre moved ahead 1”. to am. Aslo ahead were Dis- tillersengrnm. up to ma; Dome Mines up Vi st in and Hudson Bay mining up e at Q16 Aluminum Limited droppel three points to lift": and Canadian Pe- cifle was off is at 3312. On the American Stock Er- change. Brazilian Traction moved ahead is to 7ls and Canadian Marconi gained Us to n's. Preston East Dome Oils dropped I-16 to Hi and Molybdenite was un- l m.......:.m.m.:....-m.- l PIONEER VESSEL l The rim steamboat mi the st. glsawrence river was built by JOE glloiann I Montreal in ii. the tax applies on the specific ris. an-ll nouncing the new tax last sprlng.l said it was intended as a rneansi of arresting inroads by special; and circulation available to Cans- The tax was criticized by lpealt- ers from the Progressive Conserv- l allabla figures give ' circulation of .